This might be helpful to some of you who do paddle trips or camp on crown land in Ontario. A few years ago they changed how you buy these permits online. If you have used Ontario One-key website to get a permit, it is no longer valid. The old system was quite cryptic, and the new system is as well. Simply finding the correct web site is the biggest hurdle. By the way, each person on the trip has to have an account and pay individually for each night camping.
Permits are now available at the Ontario Natural Resources Information Portal: https://nrip.mnr.gov.on.ca
Step 1:
Login or Sign up
Step 2:
Click on “Start a submission”
Then select:
Who? myself
Business Line? Lands and Waters
Select a form? Non Resident Crown Land Camping Permit
You are then taken to a page where you can fill in all the appropriate information for your trip and as far as I remember pay with a credit card and print out the permit and/or save to your phone. If you have days before and after the trip where you’ll be camping on crown land, you’ll have to buy 2 separate permits.
One more tip. At the end of a trip last year I intended to drive back across the border, but was too tired and pulled over on a side road and camped. Some MNR officers stopped and asked for my crown land permit (first time ever), which I did not have, but I did have a day left on my Wabakimi permit. They said that it will work as well. I’m not sure if they were personally OK with it, or if it is official.
Mark
Permits are now available at the Ontario Natural Resources Information Portal: https://nrip.mnr.gov.on.ca
Step 1:
Login or Sign up
Step 2:
Click on “Start a submission”
Then select:
Who? myself
Business Line? Lands and Waters
Select a form? Non Resident Crown Land Camping Permit
You are then taken to a page where you can fill in all the appropriate information for your trip and as far as I remember pay with a credit card and print out the permit and/or save to your phone. If you have days before and after the trip where you’ll be camping on crown land, you’ll have to buy 2 separate permits.
One more tip. At the end of a trip last year I intended to drive back across the border, but was too tired and pulled over on a side road and camped. Some MNR officers stopped and asked for my crown land permit (first time ever), which I did not have, but I did have a day left on my Wabakimi permit. They said that it will work as well. I’m not sure if they were personally OK with it, or if it is official.
Mark